Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Medical Emergencies

A long time ago, I was a lifeguard. This meant annual updates of all my certification, especially first aid and CPR. And every year some aspect of this training changed dramatically. The number of chest compressions to breaths changed. Airway opening techniques no longer flex the spine. I even recall my first year of training required the placement of fingers in the mouth of a seizure victim, to prevent the biting off of their tongue.

Thank goodness things change. I like my hands.

My concern today is for more general treatment knowledge. I’m not a professional anymore; my medical training should be more appropriate to my lifestyle. To care for myself and my friends in emergency situations, supplemented by regular check-ups.

I want a guide book with a solid foundation of the basics. I want clarity without condescension and strong organization to the content. I want a book that covers first aid, environment-specific injuries, common and life-threatening medical conditions, as well as rescue techniques.

Enter the woodsy-named Buck Tilton. As co-founder of the Wilderness Medicine Institute of the National Outdoor Leadership School in Wyoming, his prolific wilderness writing has led to the following book:

Written with nearly a score of medical professionals, this textbook includes clear anatomical illustrations, discussions on the legal ramifications of first aid, and practical suggestions for medicine without medical facilities. Chapters include psychological trauma, obstetric and gender-specific maladies, and unique scenario guides - lightening strikes, diving injuries, and unusual animal bites. The glossary is excellent, as is the guide to assembling a wilderness medical kit.

I think I need a copy for my personal survival collection.

If like me , you find this topic entertaining, you may enjoy reading the following:

"For 15 years, Steven Schrader worked as a firefighter and an Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) in Atlanta, Georgia. There, he faced the day-to-day stress created by having to deal with nonstop human catastrophe, one moment administering to terribly hurt accident victims, the next talking down a suicidal person from a rooftop. Added to these difficulties were his own personal struggles, not the least being the bias he experienced because of his severe hearing loss. Silent Alarm presents his no-frills, stunning account of survival in a profession with a notoriously high burn-out rate, and the good that he did as a topnotch EMT." - Publisher

"Paramedic Jonathan Trestle doesn't quite to know what to do when a man who appears close to dying utters a gibberish sentence, thrusts a paper full of incomprehensible notations into his hand, and tells Jonathan to “give this to Martin.” Trying to find out more about the man, not to mention the mysterious Martin, Jonathan stumbles into a murder mystery that threatens to cut his own life short. Although it's a bit rough around the edges, Grady's novel should appeal to fans of fast-paced thrillers with a medical theme (Michael Palmer fans, for example, should do well here). The author, a firefighter and paramedic, captures the novel's milieu perfectly..." Booklist

"When paramedic Kirke Palmer agreed to the deathbed request of a hit and run victim, she thought she was doing the right thing. All she had to do was deliver an envelope--and keep the police out of it. Little did she realize that her good-will gesture would make her the target of a cold-blooded killer." - Publisher

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